ABUSE TRACKER

A digest of links to media coverage of clergy abuse. For recent coverage listed in this blog, read the full article in the newspaper or other media source by clicking “Read original article.” For earlier coverage, click the title to read the original article.

April 26, 2021

Eight Abusive Clerics Assigned to One Catholic Church in New Mexico, Now the Archdiocese of Santa Fe Wants the Parish’s Help to Settle Victim Claims

SANTA FE (NM)
SNAP - Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests [Chicago IL]

April 26, 2021

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Eight of the ‘credibly accused’ priests or other religious listed on the website of the Archdiocese of Santa Fe worked at St. Therese in Albuquerque. Now, this poor parish, devastated by the effects of these unconscionable assignments over which it had no control, is being asked to contribute to the Archdiocese’s universal settlement in its Chapter 13 bankruptcy reorganization. We hope that the faithful who attend this church begin to speak up and ask questions about what the Archdiocese has done to prevent this from happening again.

While this parish and so many others grapple with the effects of child sex abuse within their faith community, the Archdiocese of Santa Fe is focused on the financials. We believe that victims have long held the true liability of the horrific crimes done to them, the accountability and responsibility must come from the institution and…

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Conference: A Wounded Church

OTTAWA (CANADA)
St. Paul University [Ottawa, Ontario, Canada]

April 26, 2021

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April 28 – May 1, 2021

International Conference

Online 

“For more than thirty years, the Catholic Church has been going through a crisis that has caused deep wounds and painfully torn the fabric of the Church. The sexual abuse of thousands of children in the heart of the Church is an unbearable suffering and an immense scandal. The Centre for Safeguarding Minors and Vulnerable Persons at Saint Paul University in Ottawa is organizing a three-day conference in which international witnesses and experts who have lived through this crisis will share their experiences and findings. This is a unique opportunity offered to listen, understand and explore new paths of reconstruction and hope.”

Fee: Regular 50$ / Students 10$

Wednesday April 28 2:30pm – 4pm (EST)

Massimo Faglioli: Did the Church protect abusers?

Dr. Massimo Faggioli is full professor in the Department of Theology and Religious Studies at Villanova University (Philadelphia). His books and articles have been…

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Keith Rennar Brennan, speaks about the abuse he endured at St. Paul The Apostle Roman Catholic Church, in Jersey City, and what he has done to try to help other survivors. Monday, April 19, 2021 Kevin R. WexlerKevin R. Wexler, NorthJersey.com

‘You think you’re the only one’: NJ abuse survivor featured in Discovery+ documentary

JERSEY CITY (NJ)
NorthJersey.com [Woodland Park NJ]

April 26, 2021

By Deena Yellin

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[Photo above: Keith Rennar Brennan speaks about the abuse he endured at St. Paul The Apostle Roman Catholic Church, in Jersey City, and what he has done to try to help other survivors. Monday, April 19, 2021. — Kevin R. Wexler, NorthJersey.com]

At first, Keith Rennar Brennan felt flattered by the attention lavished on him by the director of his church choral group. 

“After only a few weeks of being in the group, he started calling me every night and we’d meet every week,” Brennan said of the music director at St. Paul the Apostle Roman Catholic Church in Jersey City, where he grew up. 

But starting at age 14, the yearlong friendship evolved into sexual abuse. It took Brennan a year to summon the courage to report the situation to a church deacon. Instead of offering help, the cleric plied him with drugs and alcohol and also assaulted him, said Brennan, who later…

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Abuse lawsuit filed against diocese

TRENTON (NJ)
Diocese of Trenton NJ

April 12, 2021

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A notice from the Diocese of Trenton

A civil lawsuit has been filed against the Diocese of Trenton alleging the sexual abuse of a minor in 1989-90 by Rev. Joseph Farrell, currently pastor of St. Isidore the Farmer Parish in New Egypt. The abuse was alleged to have taken place during Father Farrell’s ministry in Our Lady of Perpetual Help-St. Agnes Parish in Atlantic Highlands. A report was filed immediately by the Diocese with the Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office and the Diocese has pledged its full cooperation to law enforcement.  Father Farrell has been placed on leave by the Diocese and an investigation into the credibility of the allegation will be pursued.

Announcements were made at both Our Lady of Perpetual Help-St. Agnes Parish and St. Isidore the Farmer Parish at weekend Masses April 10 and 11. The Diocese requests prayers for all involved in this painful and difficult matter and,…

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N.J. Catholic priest accused of sexually abusing a boy 30 years ago

ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS (NJ)
NJ Advance Media - nj.com [Iselin NJ]

April 24, 2021

By Rebecca Panico

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A Catholic priest in Atlantic Highlands stands accused of sexual assault in a lawsuit filed by a man who claims the priest repeatedly molested him decades ago when he was 13 or 14 years old.

Rev. Joseph Farrell, now a pastor at St. Isidore the Farmer Parish in New Egypt, was put on leave by the Diocese of Trenton after the 44-year-old man filed suit. NJ Advance Media is not disclosing the plaintiff’s name since his lawsuit involves claims of sexual abuse.

“A report was filed immediately by the Diocese with the Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office and the Diocese has pledged its full cooperation to law enforcement,” the Diocese of Trenton said in a statement.

The lawsuit says Farrell began to groom him for abuse while he was a student at the now-closed St. Agnes Catholic School in Atlantic Highlands around 1989 or…

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Protesters urge Diocese of Rockville Centre to release names of 40 prominent clergymen accused of sexual abuse

ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NY)
News 12 Long Island [Woodbury NY]

April 25, 2021

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[VIDEO]

Protesters formed outside St. Agnes Cathedral Sunday to demand the Diocese of Rockville Centre to release the names of clergymen accused of sexually abusing children, teens, and vulnerable adults.

After the diocese filed for bankruptcy to pay damages to abuse survivors, it named more than 100 priests and deacons that have been accused of sexual abuse in accordance with the court’s ruling.

However, victims and their advocates say the list fails to include more than 40 prominent clergymen.

Harold Siering, of Massapequa Park, says he was abused hundreds of times by a clergy member on Long Island, and he wants victims to file lawsuits against the diocese about the alleged abuse before a court deadline of Aug. 14.

“We continue to protest because I want to let the whole world know that there are survivors out there that can help other survivors. We have a date coming up of Aug. 14 this year…

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WI Attorney General to investigate Clergy child assault

MADISON (WI)
WAOW-TV, Ch. 9 [Wausau WI]

April 25, 2021

By Brittany Slaughter

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The Wisconsin Attorney General is launching an investigation into Clergy abuse in Catholic Churches.

Last January the Diocese of Lacrosse released a list of 25 Clergy that were allegedly accused of child sexual abuse. Now, Attorney General Kaul is stepping in to find out just how many Clergy have assaulted children in the past.

Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests (SNAP), released a statement saying they are excited to hear of Kaul’s plans. In their release they said they are hoping for an in depth investigation that includes warrants, subpoenas, and a confidential hotline for victims.

AG Kaul is expected to make an official announcement tomorrow but the Diocese of La Crosse released a statement saying:

“The Diocese of Lacrosse is awaiting the details concerning the Attorney General’s inquiry so we might make an informed response. We will continue to pray for abuse survivors, assists in the healing process,…

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Rev. Lawrence Sullivan, Pastor Of Christ The King Parish, Asked To Step Aside Over Decades-Old Sex Assault Allegation

CHICAGO (IL)
WBBM - CBS 2 [Chicago IL]

April 21, 2021

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The pastor of Christ the King Parish in Beverly has been asked to step aside amid allegations that he sexually assaulted a minor decades ago.

Blaise Cardinal Cupich issued a letter to members of the Christ the King Parish, 9235 S. Hamilton Ave., and its school about the Rev. Lawrence Sullivan. Cupich wrote that the Archdiocese of Chicago’s Office of Child Abuse Investigations and Review learned of a report that Sullivan sexually assaulted a minor 36 years ago when he was 18.

Cupich has asked Sullivan to step aside while the allegation is investigated, emphasizing that the allegation has not been proven true or false and guilt or innocence should not be assumed.

The Rev. James Mazydlo, pastor of St. Walter Parish, will serve as the temporary administrator for Christ the King.

The allegation against Sullivan was also reported to the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services and the…

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Letter from Cardinal Blase J. Cupich, archbishop of Chicago, on Father Lawrence Sullivan

CHICAGO (IL)
Archdiocese of Chicago IL

April 21, 2021

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Dear members of the Christ the King Parish and School communities,

I write to share some difficult news about your pastor, Father Lawrence Sullivan. The Archdiocese of Chicago’s Office for Child Abuse Investigations and Review learned this week of a report alleging that Father Sullivan sexually assaulted a minor thirty-six years ago when he was eighteen years old. In keeping with our child protection policies, I have asked Father Sullivan to step aside from ministry while this allegation is investigated. Allegations are claims that have not been proven as true or false. Therefore, guilt or innocence should not be assumed.

Father Sullivan has agreed to cooperate fully with my request and will live away from the parish. Father James Mezydlo will serve as the temporary administrator of Christ the King Parish and will attend to the needs of the parish and school community. Father Mezydlo, the Pastor of St. Walter…

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Christ the King parish priest asked to step aside in light of sexual assault allegation

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Tribune

April 21, 2021

By Mike Nolan, Daily Southtown

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The pastor at Christ the King parish on Chicago’s Southwest Side was asked to step aside following a report alleging he sexually assaulted a minor 36 years ago when he was 18, according to a letter Wednesday from Cardinal Blase Cupich.

In the letter to parish families, Cupich said that the Rev. Larry Sullivan will live away from the parish while the allegation is investigated and that the Rev. James Mezydlo, pastor of St. Walter Church, will take over Sullivan’s duties at the parish and school.

Sullivan, in a letter emailed to Christ the King parishioners Monday, said he became aware of an accusation against him that had been posted on social media.

He wrote the incident occurred in 1984 and while he was at a fast-food restaurant “I made unwelcome verbal comments to a female employee that upset her to the extent that her parents and the police were…

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Letter to Parishioners from Fr. Larry Sullivan

CHICAGO (IL)
Christ the King Parish [Chicago IL]

April 19, 2021

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Dear Parishioners,

I am aware of an accusation against me that has been posted on social media regarding an
incident that occurred in 1984 when I was 18 years old and had just completed high school. I
do recall the night described: I was at a fast-food restaurant and I made unwelcome verbal
comments to a female employee that upset her to the extent that her parents and the police
were contacted. There was no physical interaction between me and the young woman. I was
in the restaurant and spoke to the police, and I left the restaurant without any further police
action.

I was then, and am now, ashamed and deeply sorry that my words caused pain and hardship
to her.

I want to be clear that these allegations were brought to my attention after having been
presented on social media and I have not been formally advised that any complaint has been
made to the Archdiocese. Nevertheless, I have reported…

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Chicago priest steps aside after Tik Tok allegation

CHICAGO (IL)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

April 24, 2021

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A Chicago pastor has stepped away from his parish this week after sexual assault allegations were made against him from 1984.

Fr. Larry Sullivan, pastor at Christ the King Church, has been accused of attacking and attempting to sexually assault a woman right before he entered seminary.

The allegations were raised in a Tik Tok video, in which a woman says that she was working at a restaurant in 1984, when Sullivan and another man followed her into an alley, ABC 7 reported.

“They attacked me and their intent was to sexually assault me. I fought them off, the police were called, my parents came [and] we found out that one of them was leaving for seminary the next day to become a Catholic priest,” the woman said.

Sullivan responded to the allegation in a letter to his parishioners.

“I am aware of an accusation against me that has been posted…

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Pastor at Christ the King parish steps aside while archdiocese investigates sexual assault allegation from 1984

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Sun-Times [Chicago IL]

April 21, 2021

By Sam Kelly

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The woman recently made the allegations in a TikTok video, saying the Rev. Larry Sullivan — then an 18-year-old seminary student —attacked her in an alley outside where she worked. She said she was 17.

The pastor at Christ the King parish in Beverly is stepping aside while the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Chicago investigates allegations that he assaulted a restaurant worker about 37 years ago, on the night before he was to leave for the seminary.

The woman recently made the allegations in a TikTok video, saying the Rev. Larry Sullivan and another person followed her into an alley while she took out the garbage near closing time. She said she was 17.

“They attacked me and their intent was to sexually assault me. I fought them off, the police were called, my parents came [and] we found out that one of them was leaving for seminary…

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Church analyst: The bishops are uneasy with Biden, but he could be good news

WASHINGTON (DC)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

April 23, 2021

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The majority of U.S. bishops in a recent survey were at best “uneasy” with the second Catholic president in U.S. history, said Catholic analyst Francis Maier, yet Joe Biden’s presidency could in an unexpected way be good news for the Catholic Church.

Maier, a Senior Fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center (EPPC), spoke at the John F. Scarpa Conference on Law, Politics, and Culture at Villanova University on April 23.

“Over the past six months,” he said, “I’ve done confidential interviews with 29 bishops about the future of the Church for a project I’m pursuing through Notre Dame’s Constitutional Studies program. Twenty-eight of those men were American. These are mainstream guys. No cranks and no outliers. They come from very different backgrounds. They serve in a wide variety of pastoral conditions, urban and rural. And they lead dioceses in every region of the country, in 20 different states.” 

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April 25, 2021

The tower of Mary, Mother of Priests Catholic Church rises along N.M. 4 in Jemez Springs. Matt Dahlseid / The New Mexican

In New Mexico, shadows of a former haven for troubled priests

JEMEZ SPRINGS (NM)
Santa Fe New Mexican [Santa Fe NM]

April 25, 2021

By Rick Ruggles

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[Photo above: The tower of Mary, Mother of Priests Catholic Church rises along N.M. 4 in Jemez Springs. Matt Dahlseid / The New Mexican. See also the front page of the newspaper with this article.]

What remains of the Servants of the Paraclete here is a wisp of the Catholic order that thrived in this mountain town a few decades ago.

The ministry that drew hundreds of priests to Jemez Springs for nearly 50 years, treating them for problems ranging from alcoholism to pedophilia, shows hints of its old self. But its history is inescapable as the Archdiocese of Santa Fe continues to raise money to settle lawsuits filed by dozens of people who say they were sexually abused by priests.

Opened in 1947, the Paracletes’ properties appear to be mostly empty. There may be as few as two priests and one brother there. One building north of town…

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When sin runs deep: One Puyallup church, two priests, one awful legacy of child abuse

SEATTLE (WA)
News Tribune [Tacoma WA]

April 24, 2021

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Twice in the past two years, a Catholic parish in Pierce County has found itself on a list of sin, scandal and modest compensation for great pain. It’s a list that no church wants to show up on.

Credible allegations of sexual abuse against two former priests led to financial settlements between abuse survivors and the Archdiocese of Seattle. The two served at All Saints Parish in Puyallup within a decade of each other. Both were accused of violating their sacred trust while assigned to the parish on 3rd Street Southwest.

And both men, now dead, won’t see the smidgen of accountability that’s being extracted a half century later.

The latest settlement involves William O’Brien, who began his priesthood in Seattle in 1925 and finished it in Puyallup 45 years later. His longest assignment was at All Saints from 1949 until he died in 1970. According to O’Brien’s unidentified accuser…

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Pope ordains 9 priests, saying: Stay humble, compassionate

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Associated Press [New York NY]

April 25, 2021

By Frances D'Emilio

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Pope Francis on Sunday gave the Catholic church nine new priests, encouraging them in an ordination ceremony in St. Peter’s Basilica to be humble and compassionate and to stay close to the rank-and-file faithful, whose trust in clergy has been sorely tested by decades of sex abuse scandals.

Professing obedience to the pontiff during the Mass on Sunday were six men from Italy and one each from Romania, Colombia and Brazil. The men removed their masks, part of COVID-19 safety protocols, when they knelt before Francis and he lay his hands on their head as part of the ordination ritual. At another point of the ceremony, the nine lay prostrated on a carpet in front of the basilica’s central altar in a sign of obedience, humility and giving of oneself.

Shortages of locally ordained seminarians have in recent decades seen priests be transferred to predominantly Catholic countries like Italy from…

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German president urged to withhold medal for Catholic bishop

MUNICH (GERMANY)
Deutsche Welle [Bonn, Germany]

April 24, 2021

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Sex abuse victims have urged the German president not to award an Order of Merit — equal to a knighthood — to Munich’s bishop, Cardinal Reinhard Marx.

Catholic victims of sex abuse urged German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier on Saturday not to give one of the country’s top honors to Cardinal Reinhard Marx. 

The bishop of Munich served as chair of Germany’s Catholic Bishops’ Conference until 2020. Although outspoken for victims in recent years, Marx also stands accused of concealing cases, including a priest’s misuse of a woman employee and forcing her to abort a pregnancy in 1989.

He is now expected to receive Germany’s top Order of Merit with Star — what in Anglo-Saxon countries would be a knighthood — from Germany’s President Frank-Walter Steinmeier.

Victims’ representative threatens to give back his own medal

A group of sex abuse victims say that honoring Marx in this way would render their efforts to shed light on church cover-ups “valueless” and…

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For First Time, Diocese Releases List of ‘Credibly Accused’ Clergy

ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NY)
East Hampton Star [East Hampton NY]

April 23, 2021

By Carissa Katz

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As part of its bankruptcy court filings, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Rockville Centre, which oversees parishes across Long Island, has released a list of over 100 clergy accused of sexual abuse while serving in the diocese, including some who had not previously been identified. Eleven of the clergy on the list served on the South Fork from the late-1950s through as recently as 2000.

The list names priests who served at Most Holy Trinity in East Hampton, St. Andrew in Sag Harbor, St. Therese of Lisieux in Montauk, Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary in Southampton, Queen of the Most Holy Rosary in Bridgehampton, and the Villa Maria convent in Water Mill.

All 101 of them are men against whom a diocesan review board has determined that the allegations of abuse were credible, those “against whom an allegation of abuse was made” through an Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program,…

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Attorneys: Prominent figures left out of Catholic diocese list on abuse allegations

ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NY)
Newsday [Melville NY]

April 24, 2021

By Bart Jones

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The late Bishop John McGann and Msgr. Alan Placa had been prominent figures in the Catholic Church on Long Island, which is grappling with a still-unraveling sexual abuse scandal.

But neither is on a list of 101 clergy members accused of sexual abuse of minors that the diocese recently released, even though related lawsuits have been filed against both, according to attorneys for alleged abuse victims. The attorneys called the omission of the two, who held powerful posts in the Diocese of Rockville Centre, an example of what they claim is a continuing cover-up of wrongdoing in the church.

“Clearly, the Diocese of Rockville Centre should have listed Bishop McGann as being accused of sexual abuse on multiple occasions if it really cared about safety, accountability, healing and transparency,” said Mitchell Garabedian, a Boston-based lawyer who has filed three civil complaints on behalf of alleged sexual abuse victims of McGann.

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Parishes enlisted to help pay clergy abuse victims

SANTA FE (NM)
Albuquerque Journal [Albuquerque NM]

April 24, 2021

By Colleen Heild

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St. Therese Catholic Parish in Albuquerque’s North Valley was once the largest in the Archdiocese of Santa Fe, with a holy shrine and tiled-roof church considered one of the finest ecclesiastical buildings in New Mexico.

These days, the parish on North Fourth is one of the smallest and struggles to make ends meet. It is behind on its property insurance and in debt to the Archdiocese of Santa Fe, owing more than a year’s worth of Sunday collection plate assessments, according to its pastor.

Its usual fundraising efforts crippled by the COVID-19 virus, the parish has taken to holding green chile roasting events to pay bills.

But sacrifice it will, as one of more than 90 parishes grappling with the archdiocese’s request to help pay a universal settlement in its Chapter 13 bankruptcy reorganization.

“We have very minuscule savings at the Archdiocese Savings and Loan Program at the Catholic Center…

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St. Therese no stranger to clergy sexual abuse

ALBUQUERQUE (NM)
Albuquerque Journal [Albuquerque NM]

April 24, 2021

By Colleen Heild

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St. Therese Catholic parish in Albuquerque knows too well the scourge of clergy sexual abuse.

Eight of the 79 priests and other clergy members on the archdiocese list of those “credibly accused” of molesting children worked at the North Valley parish over a 32-year period. The first priest was assigned in 1959, five years after the current church was built.

The eight included Jason Sigler, one of the few priests who worked in New Mexico who were criminally charged and who went to prison after being convicted of sexually abusing a minor.

Across the U.S., many survivors of clergy abuse served as altar boys in the church or belonged to parish youth groups when they were molested.

The Archdiocese of Santa Fe’s website says it has adopted a “zero-tolerance” policy on clergy sexual abuse, and says there have been no substantiated cases involving diocesan priests since 2005.

Court records in…

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Chennai priest among four held under Pocso Act for sexual abuse of playback singer’s daughter

CHENNAI (INDIA)
New Indian Express [Chennai, India]

April 24, 2021

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The Chennai police have arrested the priest of a church and three other relatives of a minor girl who was allegedly sexually abused by them. The arrests came almost 10 days after her mother, a playback singer, lodged a complaint.

Apart from the priest Henri (40), those arrested included the singer’s sister, the latter’s husband and the husband’s brother. While the police registered a case a week ago, the accused were picked up from a farmhouse in Tindivanam on Friday and remanded in judicial custody.

Police said that the singer left her daughter in her sister’s custody when the victim was just six as she had to relocate to Hyderabad. The girl, who is 15 years old now and studying at a private school, reportedly informed her mother recently about the abuse she was subjected to by her aunt, uncle and the priest Henri, when she was taken to the…

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Former U.P. Priest to Serve Prison Time in Abuse Plea

MARQUETTE (MI)
Department of Attorney General - Michigan [Lansing MI]

April 22, 2021

By Lynsey Mukomel

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Tireless work by the Michigan Attorney General’s clergy abuse investigation team has resulted in another successful plea agreement and will lead to prison for a former priest in the Upper Peninsula. 

Gary Jacobs, 75, pleaded guilty to four counts of criminal sexual conduct in Ontonagon County Thursday afternoon. 

As part of the offer, Jacobs was required to plead guilty to one count, and the highest charge, on each of the four cases he faced. This resulted in admission of guilt on three counts of CSC 1st degree and one count of CSC 2nd degree.  

Other aspects of the plea agreement include: 

  • Jacobs will serve between eight and 15 years on each count, which will run concurrently; 
  • Lifetime sex offender registration on the three counts of CSC 1st degree; 
  • Tier II registration on the CSC 2nd degree charge; 
  • All victims – those involved in the charged cases and those who came forward since – can speak at sentencing if they wish; 
  • Sex offender counseling; and
  • Lifetime electronic monitoring when released.  

“This plea agreement and subsequent prison time is the culmination of resolute work by our clergy abuse investigation…

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April 24, 2021

Ex-priest pleads guilty to abuse in Upper Peninsula in ’80s

ONTONAGON (MI)
Associated Press [New York NY]

April 22, 2021

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A former priest who left Michigan decades ago pleaded guilty Thursday to sexually abusing teens in the Upper Peninsula in the 1980s, the attorney general’s office said.

Gary Jacobs, 75, pleaded guilty to four counts of criminal sexual conduct in Ontonagon County and will serve at least eight years in prison before he’s eligible for parole, authorities said.

“This sentence will not erase the pain Mr. Jacobs inflicted on those who trusted him. But I hope our pursuit of justice can offer some sense of relief as their vulnerability led to this accountability,” Attorney General Dana Nessel said.

Jacobs is scheduled to make a similar plea deal in Dickinson County on May 3, Nessel said.

A message seeking comment from his attorney wasn’t immediately returned.

The Diocese of Marquette has said Jacobs was removed from ministry in 1988 and left the state. He was living in Albuquerque, New Mexico, when…

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Two-year ‘window’ for abuse lawsuits gets new support in Pennsylvania

HARRISBURG (PA)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

April 23, 2021

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A bill that could expand child sex abuse lawsuits in the state of Pennsylvania has received new support in the state legislature, signaling its possible passage after more than two years of unsuccessful efforts.

The proposed legislation, House Bill 951, lifts some sovereign immunity protections in child sex abuse cases for public schools and institutions. It creates a two-year window for lawsuits to be filed in old cases where the statute of limitations had already expired.

Survivors of abuse may sue their perpetrator or the institution that contributed to the abuse through negligence.

Democratic state Rep. Mark Rozzi, who says he was abused by a priest at age 13, introduced the bill. The state Senate Judiciary Committee voted 11-3 on Wednesday to approve an amended form of the bill. Now that it has received new support, supporters are hopeful that the bill could pass the legislature.

The Pennsylvania Catholic Conference…

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Vatican suspended canonical investigation of Detroit priest

DETROIT (MI)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

April 23, 2021

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The Archdiocese of Detroit will proceed with a “canonical disciplinary process” against a priest accused of the sexual abuse of a minor, after the Vatican declined to move forward with a canonical investigation. 

The priest, Fr. Eduard Perrone, was the pastor of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary (Grotto) parish in Detroit. Perrone has not served in public ministry since 2019, after the accusation was made against him and the diocese conducted a preliminary investigation. He maintains his innocence. 

In an April 13 statement, the archdiocese explained that approximately two years ago, it began a canonical “preliminary investigation” of the allegations against the priest. After this review, the archdiocese forwarded the allegations to the Vatican. 

However, the archdiocese said that it could not take action in the case after the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF) would not move forward with its investigation of Fr. Perrone. 

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Catholic Bishop Bill Wright orders priest’s name taken off Gateshead school building but will not say why

GATESHEAD (AUSTRALIA)
Newcastle Herald [Newcastle, Australia]

April 24, 2021

By Ian Kirkwood

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The name the “Roger Kennedy Centre” has been removed from a hall at St Mary’s Catholic College, Gateshead, but the Bishop of Maitland-Newcastle, Bill Wright, will not say why.

The diocesan refusal to explain its actions coincides with its call for public help – including through the Newcastle Herald – to plan a memorial to the victims and survivors of its sexually abusing clergy and teachers.

Monsignor Roger Kennedy, a long-serving priest at Gateshead, died in 1994.

Robert O’Toole, a co-founder of the Clergy Abused Network (CAN), said Kennedy stands accused of historical sexual abuse of both boys and girls.

“Monsignor Kennedy was at Muswellbrook, New Lambton, Kurri Kurri, Newcastle, Carrington and Gateshead,” Mr O’Toole said. “CAN is aware of allegations of abuse against Monsignor Kennedy in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s.”

Mr O’Toole said he told Bishop Wright about the allegations in December.

Mr O’Toole said he told Bishop…

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April 23, 2021

Parishes cannot obstruct sex abuse investigations

CHICAGO (IL)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

April 23, 2021

By Michel Sean Winters

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[Photo above: Fr. Michael Pfleger, pastor of St. Sabina Church in Chicago, is seen in this 2015 file photo. Cardinal Blase Cupich of Chicago asked the priest to step aside from ministry Jan. 5, after the Archdiocese of Chicago received an allegation he sexually abused a minor over 40 years ago. (CNS / Jim Young, Reuters)]

The Catholic Church’s struggle to eradicate the cancer of clergy sex abuse is on trial today. The community at St. Sabina church in Chicago is trying to obstruct the investigation of their much-beloved pastor Fr. Michael Pfleger on charges he sexually molested minors, according to a report in the Chicago Sun-Times.

“Once again this week, there was an organized effort through the St. Sabina website to employ inappropriate and intimidating tactics to put pressure on the Archdiocese of Chicago and the Independent Review Board (IRB) as the case of Father Michael…

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After warning from cardinal, St. Sabina pastor says he’s encouraging ‘respectful’ support for Pfleger

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Sun-Times [Chicago IL]

April 22, 2021

By Sam Kelly and Grace Asiegbu

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Cardinal Blase Cupich has lashed out at “intimidating tactics” by supporters of the Rev. Michael Pfleger.

Days after Chicago’s cardinal lashed out at “intimidating tactics” by supporters of the Rev. Michael Pfleger, the current pastor at St. Sabina’s church said he has instructed parishioners to express themselves “respectfully.”

Last week, Cardinal Blase Cupich blasted attempts to influence an investigation into Pfleger as “offensive and an injustice,” citing a coordinated effort to “flood the archdiocese’s phone lines dedicated to receiving calls from victims and civil authorities.”

Magwaza, who is filling in for Pfleger during the investigation, said he received the cardinal’s letter on April 13 and has since been telling parishioners to vouch for Pfleger by “respectfully and peacefully asking [the review board] to expedite the investigation.”

The St. Sabina website’s homepage has a link to Cupich’s letter and a message directing parishioners to write directly to…

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Wisconsin to launch statewide investigation of clergy sex abuse, attorney general document reveals

MADISON (WI)
Green Bay Press Gazette [Green Bay WI]

April 22, 2021

By Haley BeMiller, Laura Schulte, and Patrick Marley

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Wisconsin authorities will launch an investigation into the state’s Catholic dioceses and religious orders to determine how many clergy members have sexually assaulted children over the years.  

Attorney General Josh Kaul notified the state’s five dioceses as well as separate orders of Catholic priests that his office will review sexual abuse allegations against clergy and other faith leaders, according to a letter obtained by USA Today Network-Wisconsin. Wisconsin is home to the Archdiocese of Milwaukee and dioceses in Madison, Green Bay, La Crosse and Superior.

“I agree with the many survivors of clergy abuse, and those who support and have advocated for them, that a review by our office is necessary to provide accountability and, ultimately, healing,” Kaul wrote. “I hope you will welcome that review.”

Kaul, a Democrat in his first term, invited representatives for the dioceses and orders to a meeting Monday to discuss next steps and indicated…

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Trial for former Cincinnati priest accused of rape begins Monday

CINCINNATI (OH)
WCPO - ABC 9 [Cincinnati OH]

April 23, 2021

By Craig Cheatham

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Geoff Drew accused of raping altar boy 30 years ago

Green Township — The trial of Rev. Geoff Drew is scheduled to begin Monday, nearly 21 months after Cincinnati police officers arrested the Catholic priest for raping an altar boy decades ago.

The victim was 10 when Drew began sexually assaulting the child, according to charging documents in the case.

Drew, 59, is charged with 9 counts of rape. He faces life in prison, if convicted.

Drew is being held at the Hamilton County Justice Center on $5 million cash bond.

According to charging documents, Drew raped the boy from 1988 to 1991 at St. Jude Catholic Church and school in Green Township.

At that time, Drew was the St. Jude music minister.

He became an ordained Catholic priest in 2004.

Drew assaulted the child in his church office during and after school, according to charging documents.

“It’s the opinion…

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Former U.P. priest pleads guilty to sex abuse, to serve minimum 8 years in prison

MARQUETTE (MI)
MLive [Walker MI]

April 22, 2021

By Justine Lofton

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A former Upper Peninsula priest pleaded guilty today to four counts of criminal sexual conduct, which will result in the harshest prison sentence thus far in the Michigan Attorney General’s clergy abuse investigation.

Gary Jacobs, 75, pleaded guilty in Ontonagon County on Thursday, April 22, to three counts of first-degree criminal sexual conduct and one count of second-degree criminal sexual conduct, the attorney general’s office announced. He was facing four separate sexual abuse cases and his plea agreement required that he plead guilty to the highest charge in each case.

Jacobs faces a fifth case in neighboring Dickinson County where a similar plea agreement is planned; that hearing is set for May 3.

The charges in the five cases involved alleged sexual assaults between 1981 and 1984 in Ontonagon County and in early 1984 in Dickinson County when Jacobs worked for the Catholic Diocese of Marquette….

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Loyola grapples with abuse allegations against former university priest

NEW ORLEANS (LA)
The Maroon - Loyola University [New Orleans LA]

April 22, 2021

By Gabriella Killett

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Editor’s note: This article has been modified from its original published version.

Tim Ballard, a previous employee of Jesuit Volunteers International, who came forward with rape accusations against former Loyola vice president the Rev. Ted Dziak, S.J. in an article released by nola.com April 18, told The Maroon he will never forget a call he received when he was abroad in June of 2005.

The call was from Dziak, a Jesuit priest and the man Ballard had worked closely with while mentoring students in Belize as a part of the service of Jesuit volunteers, the same man Ballard is alleging raped him during their time in Belize between 2004 and 2006.

As Ballard overlooked the Belizean ocean view and paced along a veranda listening to Dziak on the phone, Dziak told him he’d be returning to Belize after he’d already completed his three month contract and Ballard thought he was done. As…

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Prayers sought to heal victims of clergy abuse

VENICE (FL)
Florida Catholic [Orlando FL]

April 22, 2021

By Bob Reddy

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For the past 14 years Bishop Frank J. Dewane has held a Mass to petition for the Lord to heal and protect the victims of clerical abuse while giving the grace for all to act in helping end this scourge.

“Whatever procedure, educational announcement, commitment we make, or administrative mechanisms we put forward are all powerless compared to the strength of our prayers through our gathering at this Holy Sacrifice, at this Table of the Lord, asking the Lord to heal the victims of abuse,” Bishop Dewane stated.

The Bishop celebrated Mass April 16, 2021 at Epiphany Cathedral in Venice with the specific intention of praying for victims of child abuse. The Mass takes place annually in April, which is National Child Abuse Awareness Prevention Month, as Bishop leads the faithful in praying for an end to child abuse, and specifically the clerical abuse which has been a scourge on…

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Abuse survivor believes now is a great evangelical moment for Church

LEYDEN (MA)
Catholic News Service - USCCB [Washington DC]

April 23, 2021

By Jay Nies

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[Via the Catholic Standard, Archdiocese of Washington]

Teresa Pitt Green, who as a child was sexually abused by Catholic priests, said she is convinced “there’s a lot more hope than people dare to feel.”

“If I can turn all the suffering and darkness of my life into a testimony that even in that place, Jesus was there and Jesus heals me, then that’s not such a bad way to use having been abused,” she said.

Pitt Green is co-founder of Spirit Fire, a Christian restorative justice initiative and fellowship of survivors of abuse in the Church.

People associated with Spirit Fire find healing by integrating their therapies with their efforts to grow in their relationship with God. They share wisdom, experience and faith with others seeking healing, growth and reconciliation.

They work with Church leaders to deepen pastoral care for survivors, their family members and all Catholics, including priests, deacons,…

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It’s Time to Revisit the Satanic Panic

MANHATTAN BEACH (CA)
New York Times [New York NY]

March 31, 2021

By Alan Yuhas

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Vigilante parents dug under a preschool, searching for secret tunnels. The police swapped tips on identifying pagan symbols. A company that sells toothpaste and soap had to deny, repeatedly, that it was acting as an agent of Satan.

Early in the 1980s, baseless conspiracy theories about cults committing mass child abuse spread around the country. Talk shows and news programs fanned fears, and the authorities investigated hundreds of allegations. Even as cases slowly collapsed and skepticism prevailed, defendants went to prison, families were traumatized and millions of dollars were spent on prosecutions.

The phenomenon was so sprawling that, in its aftermath, it took on several names, like the ritual abuse scare or the day care panic. But one name has increasingly stuck: the satanic panic.

“The evidence wasn’t there, but the allegations of satanic ritual abuse never really went away,” said Ken Lanning, a former F.B.I….

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Documentary describes La Jolla psychiatrist’s battle against church secrecy

SAN DIEGO (CA)
La Jolla Light [La Jolla CA]

April 22, 2021

By Mark Day

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‘Sex, Lies and the Priesthood’ tells the story of the late Richard Sipe, who helped expose abuse.

In a scene in “Spotlight,” the Oscar-winning film about clerical sex abuse, Boston Globe reporters huddle around a speakerphone listening intently to the words of Richard Sipe, portrayed by actor Richard Jenkins.

Sipe, a former Benedictine monk renowned for his defense of clerical sex abuse victims, died at his home in La Jolla at age 85 on Aug. 8, 2018.

Sipe stunned the Globe reporters when he said 50 percent of American Catholic priests do not practice celibacy. He assumed that at least 6 percent of Boston priests were sexual predators.

He was wrong. The Globe uncovered nearly 100 priest predators in the Boston archdiocese, about 10 percent of its clergy.

The Globe series, relying heavily on Sipe’s research, won a Pulitzer Prize and led to Cardinal Bernard Law’s early retirement and transfer to Rome.

“Sex, Lies and the…

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April 22, 2021

Loyola Maroon file photo of The Rev. Ted Dziak (via Jawdat Tinawi, The Loyola Maroon) Photo by Jawdat Tinawi, The Loyola Maroon

Rape allegations surface for Jesuit priest accused of inappropriate conduct at Loyola, Boston College

NEW ORLEANS (LA)
New Orleans Advocate [New Orleans LA]

April 18, 2021

By Ramon Antonio Vargas

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[Photo above: Loyola Maroon file photo of the Rev. Ted Dziak (via Jawdat Tinawi, The Loyola Maroon) Photo by Jawdat Tinawi, The Loyola Maroon.]

A Jesuit priest who founded a Catholic service group resembling the Peace Corps before facing complaints of inappropriate conduct at Boston College and Loyola University is now accused of raping a subordinate on a volunteer mission.

Tim Ballard’s allegations against the Rev. Ted Dziak triggered Dziak’s removal last fall as chaplain at Le Moyne College in upstate New York, where he had landed after leaving Loyola only weeks earlier. It’s unclear whether Dziak faces other consequences.

It is also unclear if any prosecutor would take up Ballard’s accusations, not only because they involve events that occurred nearly 20 years ago, but also because the accuser was an adult at the time and didn’t file a contemporaneous report. Statutes of limitation also make it difficult for…

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Tetlow makes statement after former Loyola priest rape allegation

NEW ORLEANS (LA)
The Maroon - Loyola University [New Orleans LA]

April 18, 2021

By Domonique Tolliver

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University President Tania Tetlow sent out a statement via email this morning addressing a rape allegation against Rev. Ted Dziak, former VP for Mission and Identity at Loyola.

This statement comes after a Nola.com article that details accusations against Dziak, former Loyola priest, of rape and inappropriate conduct while on mission trips through Jesuit Volunteers International, an international volunteer program Dziak founded. The allegations did not occur during Dziak’s time at Loyola.

Tetlow claims Loyola only recently found out about the allegations after being contacted by a reporter for comment. The university is not aware of any allegations against Dziak during his time at Loyola, according to Tetlow.

Dziak left Loyola in the summer of 2020 after a year-long, faith-based sabbatical, according to former Loyola Maroon articles.

In the Nola.com article, Tim Ballard, 40, detailed accusations that Dziak raped him on a volunteer mission in…

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Chicago priest asked to step away following report of minor sex abuse decades-ago

CHICAGO (IL)
WGN-TV [Chicago IL]

April 21, 2021

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A Chicago priest has been asked to step away from ministry following a report of minor sex abuse from over 35 years ago.

In a letter to members of the Christ the King parish and school, Cardinal Blase Cupich said the archdiocese received a minor sex abuse allegation involving Rev. Lawrence Sullivan.

Sullivan has agreed to cooperate with the request and will live away from the parish, the archdiocese said.

Rev. James Mezydlo will serve as the temporary administrator of Christ the King Parish and will attend to the needs of the parish and school.

The archdiocese said the report alleges that Sullivan sexually assaulted a minor 36 years ago when he was 18. They did not specify if he was involved in ministry at that time or not.

Sullivan has been at Christ the King, which is located in Beverly, for the past six years, according to his biography.

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SNAP encourages Paprocki to add five names to diocese’s ‘credibly accused’ list

SPRINGFIELD (IL)
State Journal-Register [Springfield IL]

April 21, 2021

By Steven Spearie

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[Includes Twitter video clip of David Clohessy speaking about the experience for a survivor of coming forward.]

Holding signs like “Split hairs or protect kids” outside of the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception, members and supporters of a group of clergy sexual abuse survivors urged Springfield Catholic Bishop Thomas John Paprocki Wednesday to include five more names on the diocese’s list of “credibly accused” priests.

All five of the accused served at parishes or studied in the Springfield diocese, which includes 28 counties in central Illinois.

Four of the priests who have had accusations made against them are deceased, confirmed David Clohessy, a spokesman and former executive director for the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP).

The Springfield diocese “credibly accused” list includes “cases of sexual abuse of a minor by clergy in this diocese as disclosed in our voluntary review with the…

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Diocese of Savannah bishop: Society cannot close itself off from spiritual side of selves

SAVANNAH (GA)
Savannah Morning News [Savannah GA]

April 22, 2021

By Bishop Stephen D. Parkes

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Interview by Adam Van Brimmer

The following is an excerpt from a “Difference Makers” podcast interview with Bishop Stephen Parkes of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Savannah. Comments have been condensed in the interest of space. Full episodes are available at SavannahNow.com/podcasts or through mobile device podcast apps by searching “Savannah Difference Makers”.

Question: You are one of two priests — bishops actually — in your family, as your brother leads the Diocese of St. Petersburg. Are we to assume that you grew up in a devout home? 

Stephen Parkes: “Growing up, faith was always important. That said, I’ve often thought that we were not a particularly devotional family. We prayed before meals. We went to mass on Sunday. I had the opportunity to go to Catholic school from first grade through eighth grade. But otherwise, our family was into many different things, many different activities. Church was always important. Church was always a priority. And…

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10th Circuit Upholds Sex Abuse Convictions of Former Catholic Priest

ALBUQUERQUE (NM)
Courthouse News [Pasadena CA]

April 21, 2021

By Jon Parton

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[See also the decision and the original indictment.

The 10th Circuit upheld a federal grand jury’s conviction of a former priest on seven counts of sexual abuse against a 10-year-old boy dating back to the 90s.

Arthur Perrault, a former Roman Catholic priest who served at several parishes in Albuquerque, New Mexico, fled the country in 1992 to Canada and then Morocco after learning of a local reporter’s investigation into allegations that Perrault sexually abused young boys.

“After a two-week sojourn in Canada, Perrault made a new life in Morocco — a country, as it so happens, that doesn’t share an extradition treaty with the United States,” wrote Circuit Judge Gregory Phillips, a Barack Obama nominee, in the 58-page decision.

Following a federal grand jury in 2017 that charged Perrault with six counts of aggravated sexual abuse and a count of abusive sexual contact with a minor…

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Court denies former priest’s appeal in New Mexico abuse case

ALBUQUERQUE (NM)
Associated Press [New York NY]

April 21, 2021

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A federal appeals court on Wednesday upheld a former Roman Catholic priest’s convictions and 30-year prison sentence in a New Mexico case centered on sexual abuse of an altar boy at a veterans cemetery and military base.

A 58-page decision by the three judges on a 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals panel denied Arthur Perrault’s appeal, saying they were convinced Perrault “received a fundamentally fair trial in compliance with his constitutional rights.”

Perrault had fled the United States decades before he was returned from Morocco after being indicted in 2017.

Perrault was convicted in April 2019 of six counts of aggravated sexual abuse and one count of abusive sexual contact with a minor under 12. He maintained his innocence during his October 2019 sentencing.

Formerly a pastor at an Albuquerque parish and a chaplain at Kirtland Air Force Base in Albuquerque, Perrault was accused of sexually abusing a boy…

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Syracuse diocese to hold Mass for Healing amid nearly 400 sex abuse claims

SYRACUSE (NY)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

April 21, 2021

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The Diocese of Syracuse will hold a Mass for Healing on April 29 after nearly 400 sex abuse claims involving the diocese have been filed.

“One victim of sexual abuse is too many,” said an April 19 letter from Bishop Douglas Lucia of Syracuse to his diocese. “And so, to see the number ‘371’ is particularly disheartening and of the greatest concern for me because of the damage done both directly and collaterally,” he said of the 371 claims that had been filed under the state’s Child Victims Act.

Lucia said that he is renewing his commitment and that of the Diocese of Syracuse to assist survivors of sexual abuse with their healing. 

“We seek to make amends for the wrong and sinful behavior perpetrated against you and cannot apologize enough for the failure to protect you from your abusers,” said the bishop. 

New York’s Child Victims Act created a…

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Catholic laypeople in Germany demand local synod

COLOGNE (GERMANY)
Catholic News Service - USCCB [Washington DC]

April 21, 2021

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In the wake of reports on how clergy sex abuse was handled, laypeople in Cologne Archdiocese want more of a say

[Via Union of Catholic Asian News]

Catholic laypeople in the Archdiocese of Cologne have called for a local synod to address the ongoing crisis in Germany’s most populous diocese.

“We must make every effort to reestablish a genuine dialogue between the cardinal, senior members of the diocesan leadership and the grassroots of the church,” said Tim-O. Kurzbach, president of the Cologne archdiocesan council of Catholics.

However, the German Catholic news agency KNA reported a spokeswoman for the archdiocese said that, under church law, a local synod would not allow the broad participation of the faithful that currently exists in the diocesan “Pastoral Way Forward.”

“In contrast to a diocesan synod — which is a kind of advisory body of selected laypeople and priests — the approach of the Way Forward…

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Cardinal Gregory offers Mass for victims of sexual abuse ‘who have endured great suffering’

WASHINGTON (DC)
Catholic Standard [Archdiocese of Washington DC]

April 21, 2021

By Richard Szczepanowski

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Victims of child sexual abuse are deeply wounded by such abuse and the Catholic Church needs to be “more compassionate and caring” toward those victims, Washington Cardinal Wilton Gregory said at an April 21 Mass in observance of National Child Sexual Abuse and Sexual Assault Prevention Awareness Month.

“Many who are victims (of sexual abuse) are people who carry a great wound, and we as their brothers and sisters in Christ need to be reminded that we need to be part of the compassion that Christ wishes to extend to them and their families and loved ones,” Cardinal Gregory said.

Cardinal Gregory celebrated the noon Mass in the Archdiocese of Washington’s Pastoral Center’s St. Ursula Chapel. Due to COVID-19 restrictions, attendance was limited and the Mass was livestreamed.

Sexual abuse and assault victims “carry a wound that is serious and has been life changing for them,” Cardinal Gregory said. “Let…

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Lawmakers move closer to letting child sex abuse victims sue

HARRISBURG (PA)
Associated Press [New York NY]

April 21, 2021

By Marc Levy

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For the first time, prominent Republican state senators on Wednesday put their support behind legislation in Pennsylvania to change the law to allow now-adult victims of child sexual abuse to sue the perpetrators or institutions that did not prevent it when it happened years or decades ago.

The vote, 11-3, in the Senate Judiciary Committee comes after years of damning investigations into child sexual abuse by clergy in Pennsylvania’s Roman Catholic dioceses and signals that the legislation may have enough Republican support to pass the full state Senate.

Similar legislation passed the House earlier this month and Democrats — including Gov. Tom Wolf, state Attorney General Josh Shapiro and practically all of the party’s members of the Legislature — have backed the effort.

“Today’s vote brings these brave survivors the closest they have been to having their day in court,” Shapiro said in a statement.

Many childhood…

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April 21, 2021

Mendoza. Caso Próvolo: tiene fecha el inicio del juicio a las monjas Kumiko Kosaka y Asunción Martínez

(ARGENTINA)
La Izquierda Diario [Buenos Aires, Argentina]

April 21, 2021

By Andrés Bustamante

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Será a partir del día lunes 3 de mayo. Se espera que su extienda por cuatro meses aproximadamente. El inicio estaba programado el 12 de abril pero fue postergado por la situación sanitaria

El inicio del segundo juicio iba a tener lugar el 12 de abril, pero debió ser suspendido por la situación sanitaria. Ahora el Tribunal fijó que el segundo debate del por los abusos sexuales en el Instituto Próvolo se llevará a cabo a partir del día lunes 3 de mayo en forma semipresencial. Se espera que su extienda por cuatro meses. Estarán sentadas en el banquillo nueve mujeres, entre ellas las religiosas Kumiko Kosaka y Asunción Martínez.

El año pasado después del comienzo de las audiencias preliminares la defensa de las monjas imputadas presentó reiteradas veces apelaciones y pedidos de nulidad. Fueron rechazados por el Tribunal en todas las ocasiones, pero retrasaron el comienzo del segundo juicio.

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St. Joseph's Orphanage in Burlington VT. Free Press File Photo.

Vermont bill would end time limit for civil physical abuse

BURLINGTON (VT)
Associated Press [New York NY]

April 20, 2021

By Wilson Ring

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The Vermont Senate on Tuesday passed a proposal to eliminate the statute of limitations in civil cases of childhood physical abuse.

The bill, approved by a vote of 29-0, builds on legislation passed two years ago that ended the statute of limitations for civil cases of past childhood sexual abuse.

The proposal that passed Tuesday was pushed by a group of now-aging people who say they suffered physical abuse while living at the St. Joseph’s Orphanage in Burlington, which closed in 1974.

The Senate also heard allegations of abuse that were committed at the Kurn Hattin Homes for Children in Westminster, senators said. Kurn Hattin is a charitable home and school that serves children ages 6 through 15 who have been affected by tragedy, social or economic hardship, or disruption in family life.

Neither Kurn Hattin or The Roman Catholic Diocese of Burlington, which ran the Burlington orphanage at the…

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St. Michael’s High School sued over alleged abuse decades ago

SANTA FE (NM)
Albuquerque Journal [Albuquerque NM]

April 19, 2021

By Kyle Land

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Seven men filed a lawsuit last week against St. Michael’s High School in Santa Fe, alleging school officials failed to prevent three staff members – all Christian Brothers – from sexually abusing them while they were students decades ago.

The lawsuit filed in 1st Judicial District Court alleges Brothers Andrew Abdon, Louis Brousseau and Tom McConnell abused students while working for the school as teachers and athletics coaches between 1953 and 1980. All three had already been listed on the Archdiocese of Santa Fe’s credibly accused list.

The suit also names the school’s parent organization, Brothers of the Christian Schools, as a defendant in the case. Attorney Bill Keeler, who is representing the victims, said that’s because the Brothers supplied the teachers who abused students to the school.

“While these men have each filed a claim in the Archdiocese bankruptcy, the Christian Brothers must also be held accountable for allowing…

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Annual reports detail training, outreach in archdiocesan child protection efforts

BALTIMORE (MD)
Catholic Review - Archdiocese of Baltimore [Baltimore MD]

April 21, 2021

By Christopher Gunty

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The Archdiocese of Baltimore and the Independent Review Board that assists with child protection efforts released the fourth annual reports from the archdiocesan Office of Child and Youth Protection and the review board. 

Archbishop William E. Lori initiated the reports in 2019, with reports from fiscal/reporting years 2017 and 2018 released within months of each other. Since then, the reports have been issued annually.

The latest report, which covers the reporting year from July 1, 2019, to June 30, 2020, notes that the archdiocese was again, as every year, found by outside auditors to be in full compliance with standards set by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops in the 2002 Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People and its accompanying norms, as well as updates to those policies.

The report details efforts in education, employee and volunteer screening, reporting of allegations and outreach…

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The Ending of Doubt Explained

NEW YORK (NY)
Looper [New York NY]

April 20, 2021

By  Leo Noboru Lima

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If we wanted to name the 21st century movie with the best ensemble cast, we could make a strong argument for 2008’s Doubt. In addition to Meryl Streep and the late Philip Seymour Hoffman, both playing characters that rank among the richest and most complex of their careers, there was Amy Adams. She was still early in her path to stardom, but this role served as a perfect bridge between the sunny ingénues she specialized in at the time of Enchanted and the severity that would define her later roles. Topping it all off, Viola Davis, then a theater actress unknown to mainstream audiences, appeared for eight minutes in one of the all-time greatest performances with barely any screentime. All four actors earned Oscar nominations.

There was a reason Doubt, specifically, was the film to bring together such a firestorm of acting talent. An adaptation of John Patrick Shanley’s Tony-winning…

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The Forgotten Mark Ruffalo Crime Drama You Can Stream on Netflix

BOSTON (MA)
Looper [New York NY]

April 19, 2021

By Mike Bedard

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When you think of risky and hazardous careers, reporting the news might not top your list, but there’s more danger involved than you may think. Journalists obtain the facts on the important stories affecting our lives, and it doesn’t always come easily. It’s important to remember some of the most horrific scandals only came to light as a result of the hard-working women and men who make up our newsrooms. 

This is the central idea behind 2015’s Spotlight, an Academy Award winner for Best Picture and Best Original Screenplay. The film features an extremely talented group of actors, including the likes of Mark Ruffalo, Rachel McAdams, and Michael Keaton, playing the journalists who uncovered a history of abuse within the Catholic Church. It’s difficult subject matter, especially when it focuses on the victims, but it shows the constant struggle between the power of journalism and the influence of the Catholic Church. 

Thankfully, you…

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This schematic shows a ‘serving network’ of US bishops, featuring Spellman, Cooke, and McCarrick, and only those other bishops who served directly (i.e., in what the Vatican’s recent Report calls a ‘Superior-subordinate’ relationships) under one or more of them.

How McCarricks Happen

NEW YORK (NY)
Catholic Herald [London, England]

April 18, 2021

By Stephen Bullivant and Giovanni Radhitio Putra Sadewo

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[Diagram above: This schematic shows a ‘serving network’ of US bishops, featuring Spellman, Cooke, and McCarrick, and only those other bishops who served directly (i.e., in what the Vatican’s recent Report calls a ‘Superior-subordinate’ relationships) under one or more of them. See also Power, Preferment, and Patronage: Catholic Bishops, Social Networks, and the Affair(s) of Ex-Cardinal McCarrick by the same authors.]

The brute fact is that that they don’t just happen out of nowhere. Rather, McCarricks are the malign by-products of a system ostensibly designed to create something else entirely: bishops who are, as per Canon 378, ‘outstanding in solid faith, good morals, piety, zeal for souls, wisdom, prudence, and human virtues’. While we have no doubt that the system succeeds in producing those as well, it clearly suffers from significant vulnerabilities.

There are certain things you don’t want to write about. They are too sad or sordid or…

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Former teacher, coach gets two years in prison for sex assault of Oconto Falls student in 2013

OCONTO (WI)
Green Bay Press Gazette [Green Bay WI]

April 20, 2021

By Kent Tempus

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A former substitute teacher at Oconto Falls High School was sentenced to two years in prison for engaging in a sexual relationship with a student she coached.

Brynn Larsen, 31, will then serve five years on extended supervision, Judge Michael T. Judge decided.

“There’s no question in my mind that you abused your position of trust and authority as a teacher …,” Judge said Tuesday during sentencing. “There’s no way to say it other than that, and for that, there has to be a consequence.”

Larsen, an Oconto Falls native who was a star athlete at the school, worked there as a substitute teacher with the Oconto Falls School District from 2013 to 2018, and as an assistant coach for the volleyball team.

Acting on an anonymous tip, Oconto Falls police investigated whether Larsen and a then 15-year-old girl were involved in a sexual relationship in May 2014. The student and Larsen denied…

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Rochester’s Catholic diocese barred from shielding identities of accused priests

ROCHESTER (NY)
Democrat and Chronicle [Rochester NY]

April 21, 2021

By Sean Lahman

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A federal judge has blocked an effort by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Rochester to shield the identity of priests accused of sexual abuse during its bankruptcy procedure, after the Democrat and Chronicle objected to the practice.

Gannett Co. Inc., the parent corporation of the Rochester newspaper, filed a motion to intervene in the diocese’s bankruptcy proceeding “in order to enforce the public’s right of access.” 

The diocese filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in September 2019, saying it could not afford to pay the compensation being demanded in a flood of new civil suits alleging sexual abuse by its priests in past decades. Hundreds of claims have been filed against the diocese as part of the bankruptcy process.

In February, the diocese asked the court to keep the names of alleged abusers named in those claims sealed from public view

“While the Diocese has no intention of concealing the…

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Bidding War

SANTA FE (NM)
Santa Fe Reporter [Santa Fe NM]

April 21, 2021

By Katherine Lewin

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Hotel owner and elder school both make a play for Immaculate Heart property

Perched in the city’s eastern foothills, the Immaculate Heart of Mary Retreat and Conference Center sits in near silence. The coronavirus stopped most activities on the property that’s cradled by the Carmelite monastery, a residential neighborhood of expensive adobes and Museum Hill.

But behind the scenes in recent months, at least two buyers made offers to buy the retreat and conference center property from the struggling Archdiocese of Santa Fe, and a bidding war appears to be taking shape.

The owner of a company based in Austin, Texas, says he has a purchase agreement with the archdiocese to buy the property and turn it into a hotel with a restaurant and bar, which has set off concerns among current tenants and neighbors about noise, a change of pace in the area and proposed rezoning that would be…

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Former Vermonter files sexual abuse lawsuit against Weston Priory

WESTON (VT)
VTDigger [Montpelier VT]

April 20, 2021

By Kevin O’Connor

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A former Vermont resident has filed a civil lawsuit in Windsor County Superior Court, alleging the Weston Priory and the Jesuits religious order were negligent in allowing him to be sexually abused as a teenager in about 1970.

Michael Veitch, 66, of New York said he was 15 when priest James Talbot molested him during a visit to the priory, according to claims first reported in 2018.

Talbot, convicted three years ago of sexually abusing a boy in Maine, recently was released from prison. The registered sex offender, now in his 80s, was jailed earlier on another conviction and has settled lawsuits with more than a dozen other plaintiffs, according to media reports.

Veitch attorney Jessica Arbour, noting Vermont’s recent elimination of its statute of limitations on such allegations, said her client “is grateful for the chance to call those who wronged him to account now.”

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April 20, 2021

Screen shot from video: Demonstration in Harrisburg in support of HB951.

Sex abuse survivors demand windows legislation from Pa. Senate

HARRISBURG (PA)
WHTM-TV - ABC 27 [Harrisburg PA]

April 19, 2021

By Dennis Owns

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[Photo above: Demonstration in Harrisburg in support of HB951.

Survivors of childhood sexual abuse took to the Pa. Capitol steps on Monday demanding justice. Specifically, they want the legislature to pass a bill opening a window for them to sue their abusers, even if the statute of limitations has run out.

They are not victims. They are survivors. But as children, they were victimized.

“I was violently raped by a group of teachers,” said Patrick Duggan, a sex abuse survivor.

And they believe the system is assaulting them again. An amendment to let them sue their abusers was botched. Now they want a straight-up law.

“For us it’s not about politics, it’s about doing the right thing,” said Amanda Behe, sister of Joey Behe.

Amanda Behe’s brother, Joey, was an altar boy abused by a priest who struggled with demons.

“Unfortunately, he didn’t live to see justice. He actually gave…

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Victims rally in Harrisburg for bill on sexual abuse lawsuits

HARRISBURG (PA)
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette [Pittsburgh PA]

April 19, 2021

By Peter Smith

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Survivors of sexual abuse by priests, teachers and others rallied outside the Capitol in Harrisburg on Monday, calling for legislation that would create a window in the statute of limitations, allowing lawsuits over long-ago sexual abuse by clergy and others.

Chanting, “No window, no justice,” the group rallied in support of legislation that recently passed the House of Representatives and is pending in the state Senate. It would create a two-year window in the statute of limitations, which normally would prohibit lawsuits to within a few years of a victim becoming an adult.

Many of those who reported abuse by trusted adults said that due to the trauma, it took them years or decades to reach the point where they could seek justice.

Those at the rally have spoken of years of frustration as previous proposals have faltered. A similar measure, which would have created a window by amending the…

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Hoeppner apologizes to Crookston Diocese during farewell Mass

CROOKSTON (MN)
Catholic News Service - USCCB [Washington DC]

April 19, 2021

By Marie Wiering

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[Via National Catholic Reporter]

Bishop Michael J. Hoeppner presided over a farewell Mass to the Diocese of Crookston, Minnesota, April 15, two days after Pope Francis accepted the bishop’s resignation from pastoral governance of the northeast Minnesota diocese.

As requested by the pope, Hoeppner, 71, resigned April 13 following a 20-month investigation into allegations that he mishandled allegations of clergy sexual abuse.

That investigation was the first of a standing U.S. bishop under Pope Francis’ 2019 legislative document “Vos Estis Lux Mundi” (“You are the light of the world”), which provided universal means for holding bishops and other church leaders accountable for actions in addressing abuse claims, following the abuse scandal of Theodore McCarrick, a former U.S. cardinal.

As metropolitan archbishop of Minnesota, North Dakota and South Dakota, Archbishop Bernard A. Hebda of St. Paul and Minneapolis oversaw the investigation, which was carried out by a team of experts in…

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Baltimore priest suspended from ministry after child sex abuse investigation in Carroll County

BALTIMORE (MD)
Baltimore Sun [Baltimore MD]

April 19, 2021

By Jonathan M. Pitts

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A longtime Baltimore priest has been suspended from ministry after an investigation by police into allegations that he sexually abused a minor in Carroll County starting in about 1989.

The Archdiocese of Baltimore has removed the authority of Rev. Martin H. Demek, the pastor of Corpus Christi Catholic Church in Bolton Hill, to function as a priest after investigators with the Carroll County Sheriff’s Office conducted an inquiry into a report that he sexually abused a minor at St. Bartholomew Catholic Church in Manchester, where Demek served as pastor from 1987 to 1996.

No criminal charges have been filed in the case, according to Cpl. Jon Light, a spokesman for the sheriff’s office, but the archdiocese announced the disciplinary measures after beginning its own investigation late last week.

The alleged victim was 11 at the time of the first reported incident, and multiple incidents allegedly took place, according to a…

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Baltimore Archdiocese removes priest after allegation of sexual abuse involving a child

BALTIMORE (MD)
WBFF - Fox 45 [Baltimore MD]

April 19, 2021

By Chris Berinato

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The Archdiocese of Baltimore removed Fr. Martin Demek, pastor of Corpus Christi Catholic Church in Baltimore, after it received an allegation of sexual abuse involving an 11-year-old child.

The Archdiocese says it received the allegation earlier this year. The abuse allegedly began in 1989 and allegedly happened multiple times. The Archdiocese says the sexual abuse apparently happened at St. Bartholomew Catholic Church in Manchester, Maryland.

The Archdiocese says its policy is to suspend Fr. Demek pending a full investigation.

The Archdiocese says it notified the Carroll County Sheriff’s office immediately after receiving the allegation. The sheriff’s office requested that the Archdiocese refrain from investigating on its own until the office gave it permission. The Archdiocese received permission from the Carroll County Sheriff’s Office earlier this week.

Fr. Demek was ordained a priest in 1975. He served as Associate Pastor at Our Lady Queen of Peace (1975-1980), St .Thomas Aquinas (1980-1984),…

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Bishop to the rescue as Cayenne torn over sex abuse

CAYENNE (FRENCH GUIANA)
The Tablet [Market Harborough, England]

April 13, 2021

By Tom Heneghan

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Bishop Michel Dubost, after running Lyon archdiocese between the resignation of Cardinal Philippe Barbarin and the appointment of new Archbishop Olivier de Germay, will take on another clerical sexual abuse controversy as the new apostolic administrator of Cayenne diocese in French Guiana. 

Dubost, 78, will temporarily lead the diocese while a canonical inquiry investigates a dispute between retired Bishop Emmanuel Lafont and an illegal  Haitian immigrant who accuses him of sexual abuse. The bishop flatly denied the charge and accused the immigrant of robbery.  

Lafont, who had headed Cayenne diocese since 2004, handed in his resignation last October on his 75th birthday and Pope Francis took the rare step of promptly accepting it. The Cayenne public prosecutor had opened its civil inquiry into the dispute the previous week. 

The Haitian accuses Lafont, a Paris-born and Rome-educated social activist who was previously posted as a priest and then seminary vice-rector in South Africa,…

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Survivors group calls on new Belleville bishop to add 4 names to clergy sex abuse list

BELLEVILLE (IL)
Belleville News-Democrat [Belleville IL]

April 20, 2021

By Lexi Cortes

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A St. Louis-based group of child sexual abuse survivors and their supporters is calling on the new bishop of the Belleville Diocese to add four names to its publicly available list of accused priests.

Members of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, known as SNAP, said they found four men who spent time in the Belleville Diocese as they searched the internet for abuse allegations against priests with local ties.

Three of the men appear on lists of accused priests in other states. The fourth man admitted to a Belleville News-Democrat reporter 15 years ago that he had abused children in other states.

“They belong on the (Belleville Diocese) website, plain and simple,” said David Clohessy, the volunteer Missouri director for SNAP.

Monsignor John Myler, a spokesman for the Belleville Diocese, said Bishop Michael McGovern will consider updating the diocese’s…

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April 19, 2021

State Rep. Mark Rozzi on the floor of the House of Representatives on Wednesday following a vote on a bill he has spent years championing that would allow survivors of childhood sexual assault to file lawsuits against their abusers. Courtesy of Jamie Emig

Editorial: Pennsylvania Senate must stand up for victims of abuse

HARRISBURG (PA)
Delaware County Daily Times [Exton PA]

April 19, 2021

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[Photo above: State Rep. Mark Rozzi on the floor of the House of Representatives on Wednesday following a vote on a bill he has spent years championing that would allow survivors of childhood sexual assault to file lawsuits against their abusers. Courtesy of Jamie Emig]

Getting just about any piece of substantial legislation passed in Pennsylvania’s General Assembly is likely to be a roller coaster ride for the lawmakers and activists who support it. That’s just the nature of the institution.

But it’s hard to imagine anyone having a rougher ride than state Rep. Mark Rozzi and his allies trying to expand legal rights for survivors of childhood sexual abuse.

Rozzi, a Muhlenberg Township Democrat, has been working on this issue ever since entering the Legislature eight years ago. His passion for addressing the issue is motivated by his own childhood experience being raped by a priest and further fueled…

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Bishop of Raphoe confirms Diocese cooperating with retired priest investigation

LETTERKENNY (IRELAND)
Highland Radio [Letterkenny, Co. Donegal, Ireland]

April 19, 2021

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The Bishop of Raphoe has confirmed that a retired priest of the diocese has been charged with assaulting two minors between 1972 and 1975.

It is understood the 85-year-old retired priest has been released on bail after he was charged with 26 counts of indecent assault.

In a statement, Bishop Alan McGuckian says the diocese has been cooperating fully with Gardai and Tusla regarding the case.

He added that they are committed to assisting and supporting anyone who has been a victim of clerical abuse in seeking justice.

As this is an active case, the Bishop says no further comment will be made.

The statement concluded by advising anyone who wishes to report a concern, or complaint of child abuse, either current or historical to do so by contacting the Designated Liaison Person for the diocese or the statutory authorities; Tusla and Gardaí National Protective Services Bureau and in an…

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From frontier to the present: New history traces US church and its people

Leslie Woodcook Tentler’s American Catholics: A History sails between the Scylla of over-generalization and the Charybdis of perpetually getting lost amidst minor themes. Tentler admirably assigns the people and events she chronicles their appropriate significance, which is a lot harder to do than a non-historian might suppose.

Tentler also indicates in the title that she intends to focus not only on the institution of Catholicism, but on the people who populate that institution, peppering her thematic chapters with short biographical profiles of Catholics who epitomize the themes. The book starts with a sketch of Jesuit Fr. Eusebio Kino, the great Jesuit missionary of the Southwest. A reader might pass over a dry recitation of the religio-cultural atmosphere on the frontier of the Counter-Reformation Church, but in Kino we see the heightened concern for discipline and education of the clergy bearing fruit in vigorous, selfless missionary work.

Tentler then…

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April 18, 2021

Wellesley woman charged with raping student while she was a Hudson teacher

WOBURN (MA)
Boston Herald [Boston MA]

April 16, 2021

By Marie Szaniszlo

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A 37-year-old Wellesley woman was arraigned on Friday on charges of repeatedly raping a student she met while she was a teacher at a Hudson middle school, prosecutors said.

Caitlin Harding was indicted by a Middlesex grand jury on March 18 on one count of rape of a child by force, three counts of aggravated rape of a child and five counts of indecent assault and battery on a child under 14, according to Middlesex District Attorney Marian Ryan’s office.

The defendant allegedly assaulted the girl, who was 13 then, multiple times over the course of several months in 2010, the DA’s Office said.

Harding was arraigned in Middlesex Superior Court on Friday and released on personal recognizance on the conditions that she have no direct or indirect contact with the alleged victim or witnesses, have no unsupervised contact with children under 18 and not work or volunteer with children…

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Exposing the truth about nuns who sexually abuse kids

NEW YORK (NY)
Horowitz Law [Fort Lauderdale FL]

April 17, 2021

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Virtually everyone knows that thousands of priests and other male clergy have sexually violated tens or perhaps even hundreds of thousands of boys and girls. But even now, in 2021, many do NOT know that hundreds or thousands of nuns have also sexually violated kids.

Think about it: who has had more access to Catholic children for decades than Catholic sisters, who made up the majority of teachers at parochial schools and still staff many such schools today?

And who – even more than priests, brothers, monks, bishops and seminarians – have been considered ‘safe’ to have around youngsters than nuns?

Despite all that’s been revealed and written and discussed about the church’s on-going abuse and cover up crisis over decades, abuse by nuns is a largely still-unexamined part of the picture.

You can learn more about all of this on Tuesday, April 20, at 10 a.m. eastern by tuning in…

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Guarding faith: St. Louis archdiocese adds another priest’s name to its list of abusers, but won’t talk about it

CRESTWOOD (MO)
St. Louis Post-Dispatch [St. Louis MO]

April 18, 2021

By Jesse Bogan

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CRESTWOOD — In the 1950s, the Archdiocese of St. Louis was on the move, trying to catch up with a flock migrating out of the city in droves. New churches were in demand, particularly in south St. Louis County.

The Rev. Vincent J. Duggan, a former 2nd Marine Division chaplain in the South Pacific during World War II, was called in from a tiny parish in Montgomery County, Missouri, to help. His assignment: transform a farm in the 8800 block of Pardee Road into Our Lady of Providence.

With the help of a group of nuns Duggan recruited from Indiana, the church and school quickly became the spiritual home for hundreds of families. Duggan would stay more than two decades, earning high praise from his congregation, according to an extensive online history of the church that champions each milestone.

To this day, Our Lady of Providence is still active. But…

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For true healing, abuse survivors urge church to hear their stories

CLEVELAND (OH)
Crux [Denver CO]

April 18, 2021

By Dennis Sadowski, Catholic News Service

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A trio of survivors of sexual abuse are inviting the Catholic Church — from parishioners in the pews to the bishops who lead dioceses — to join them on their journey toward healing and reconciliation.

The invitation from Mike Hoffman, who chairs the Archdiocese of Chicago’s Hope and Healing Committee, Mark Williams, a special adviser to Cardinal Joseph W. Tobin of Newark, New Jersey, and a deacon in the Diocese of Joliet, Illinois who asked to remain anonymous is meant to help the wider church heal as well.

And that means hearing their stories and those of other sexual abuse victims-survivors, they told Catholic News Service in mid-April, which is Child Sexual Abuse Prevention Month and Sexual Assault Awareness Month.

It’s their belief that by hearing those stories, Catholics will be touched and begin to realize that churchwide healing from the wounds of abuse is a long process, as their…

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Father Christopher Ciomek, Pastor Of St. Peter Damian Parish In Bartlett, Removed Amid 30-Year-Old Child Sex Abuse Claims

CHICAGO (IL)
WBBM - CBS 2 [Chicago IL]

April 17, 2021

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Father Christopher Ciomek, pastor of St. Peter Damian Parish in northwest suburban Bartlett, has been removed from ministry as the Catholic Archdiocese of Chicago investigations allegations of child sex abuse dating back 30 years.

“It is with great difficulty that I write to share news about your pastor, Father Christopher Ciomek. In keeping with our child protection policies, I have asked Father Ciomek to step aside from ministry following receipt by the Archdiocese of allegations of sexual abuse of a minor approximately 30 years ago. Allegations are claims that have not been proven as true or false. Therefore, guilt or innocence should not be assumed,” Cardinal Blase Cupich said in a letter to the parish.

According to Ciomek’s biography on the church’s website, he was born in Poland, has been a priest since 1998, starting as a full-time associate pastor at St. Monica Parish in Chicago. He’s also served at St. Theresa Parish in…

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Letter from Cardinal Blase J. Cupich, archbishop of Chicago, on Fr. Christopher Ciomek

CHICAGO (IL)
Archdiocese of Chicago IL

April 17, 2021

By Cardinal Blase J. Cupich

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April 12, 2021

Dear Saint Peter Damian Parish Family, 

It is with great difficulty that I write to share news about your pastor, Father Christopher Ciomek. In keeping with our child protection policies, I have asked Father Ciomek to step aside from ministry following receipt by the Archdiocese of allegations of sexual abuse of a minor approximately 30 years ago. Allegations are claims that have not been proven as true or false. Therefore, guilt or innocence should not be assumed.  

I have further directed Father Ciomek to live away from the parish while the matter is investigated, and he is fully cooperating with this direction. Father Curtis Lambert will serve as temporary administrator of Saint Peter Damian Parish. Father Lambert presently resides in retirement at Saint Peter Damian and, as an experienced pastor, will attend to the needs of the parish community. 

Moreover, as is required by our child protection…

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Sex abuse allegations surface against Catholic priest in Bartlett

CHICAGO (IL)
WBBM Newsradio 780 AM and 105.9 FM [Chicago IL]

April 17, 2021

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There are accusations of abuse against a Catholic priest at a parish in Bartlett.

The Chicago Archdiocese released a letter late Saturday afternoon saying that Cardinal Blase Cupich has asked Father Christopher Ciomek of Saint Peter Damian Parish to step aside following allegations of sexual abuse of a minor approximately 30 years ago.

The Archdiocese said Ciomek has also been directed to live away from the parish while the matter is investigated, and he is fully cooperating.

Church leaders said the allegations were reported to the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services and the Cook County State’s Attorney.

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Archdiocese settles four abuse cases from 1960s to 1980s

SEATTLE (WA)
Read original article

The Archdiocese of Seattle has reached settlements totaling just over $1.3 million for four cases involving allegations of sexual abuse against three priests and a youth minister.

The three priests were included on the archdiocese’s “List of Clergy and Religious Brothers and Sisters for Whom Allegations of Sexual Abuse of a Minor Have Been Admitted, Establish or Determined to be Credible” when the list was originally published in January 2016.

On March 6, the archdiocese reached a settlement in a case involving an allegation of sexual abuse by Father Patrick Desmond McMahon in the mid-1970s. McMahon served as pastor at St. Mary Star of the Sea Parish in Port Townsend from 1973 to 1985. McMahon was put on administrative leave when an individual brought forward an allegation of sexual abuse. He was put on permanent prayer and penance, removing him from service. Later he was returned to the lay…

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April 17, 2021

Ruth Krall, A Bilgrimage Bibliography

(NC)
Bilgrimage

April 2, 2021

By Ruth Elizabeth Krall

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 A Bilgrimage Biography

Ruth Elizabeth Krall, MSN, PhDNote: Since 2015 my friend William D. Lindsey (Bill) has published my work on his blog Bilgrimage. At this time, the blog is inactive, so I have decided to pull together my various posts so that future researchers and academics can find them in one place.  I have arranged this bibliography so that more recent entries follow earlier ones.  

Krall, R. E.  (January 3, 2021).  Persephone’s Journey into the Underworld: Lessons for Our Time.  

Krall, R. E. (December 12, 2020).  A Meditation: The Third Sunday in Advent.  

Lindsey, William.  (December 1, 2020).  Ruth Krall’s Study Course: Black Lives Matter.  

Krall, R. E. (March 2, 2020).  Ruth Krall on the Coronovirus: “If We Fail to Adequately Care for Those Who Cannot Care for Themselves, the Door Will Open to Threaten Us All.”  

Krall, R. E. (February 5,…

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Archdiocese offers update on Fr. Perrone investigation; CDF declines to proceed

DETROIT (MI)
Detroit Catholic [Archdiocese of Detroit MI]

April 16, 2021

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A Vatican investigation into allegations of sexual abuse of minors by a Detroit-area priest has reached its conclusion, with the Holy See declining to pursue a canonical case, the Archdiocese of Detroit said April 13.

Two years ago, the archdiocese referred the allegations against Fr. Eduard Perrone, pastor of Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary (Grotto) Parish, to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, “which has the sole authority in the Catholic Church to issue a determination in such cases,” the archdiocese said.

“The CDF has informed the Archdiocese that — without ruling on the merits of the allegations against Fr. Perrone — it has decided not to proceed in this particular case,” a statement from the archdiocese’s communications department said. “Therefore, no further action can be taken in this case under church law.”

In its communication to the archdiocese, the congregation acknowledged that while its investigation into…

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Surviving Mount Cashel: Finding the strength to overcome abuse horror

(CANADA)
The Catholic Register - Archdiocese of Toronto, Ontario, Canada

April 17, 2021

By Wendy-Ann Clarke

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Jane Doe never attended Mount Cashel Orphanage, but she knows the second-hand impact all too well. 

Nightmares from the dark years her husband John spent there in the 1950s continue to rouse him in the night and for over 20 years she’s been there to comfort him back to sleep. After all that time, John, whose identity is protected for legal purposes, hasn’t fully been able to open up to her about what happened to him at the infamous boys’ orphanage that has become synonymous with sexual and physical abuse.

The couple met in Utah and now live in Idaho, over 6,600 kilometres away from the now demolished orphanage in St. John’s, Newfoundland. As a young man, John moved to the United States hoping to leave that dark past behind him. At 79, he keeps the memories from his four years there as an adolescent from 1954-58 tucked deep down…

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Plaintiffs in second Próvolo sex abuse trial demand ‘end to delays’

(ARGENTINA)
Agence France Presse [Paris, France]

April 17, 2021

By Maximiliano Ríos & Liliana Samuel, AFP

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Victims and relatives complain defence lawyers for two nuns and several other women are stalling trial into historic child sex abuse at Próvolo Institute in Mendoza Province.

Victims and relatives have called for an “end to delays” in the trial of two nuns and seven other women accused of complicity in the sexual abuse of deaf children at the Antonio Próvolo Institute for Deaf and Hearing Impaired Children in Mendoza Province, which was postponed last week due to a case of coronavirus.

The second trial in this case, which has shaken up the Catholic Church in the homeland of Pope Francis and which has already seen two priests sentenced to 40-year prison terms in 2019, was postponed last Monday for a fortnight when the defence lawyers pleaded that one of them is in isolation due to Covid-19.

“The defence lawyers of the nuns have been playing their little tricks for…

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Settlement helping victim of Colorado Catholic priest abuse to start a new life

DENVER (CO)
KMGH - The Denver Channel - ABC 7 [Denver CO]

April 16, 2021

By Tony Kovaleski

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To date, Colorado’s Catholic church has paid out more than $7 million to victims of priest abuse

A state-led investigation into child sex abuse by Catholic priests in Colorado in 2019 discovered 52 priests were responsible for sexually assaulting 212 children between the 1950s and 1999.

Now, one of the victims is telling a story of healing after he reached a settlement with the church.

“I never thought I would come out of the darkness,” said Troy Gallegos, a Denver man who kept his story a secret for more than four decades. “I’m still trying to climb out of there.”

Gallegos was a lead altar boy at Saint Francis De Sales Catholic Church in Denver. He said he kept the secret out of fear and out of respect for his mother’s visible position with the Denver Archdiocese.

“I used to hate to go to school because it was right next to the…

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Bishop Michael J. Hoeppner and other U.S. bishops concelebrate Mass in Rome, January 15, 2020 (CNS photo/Paul Haring).

A Historic Resignation: Holding Bishop Hoeppner accountable

CROOKSTON (MN)
Commonweal [New York NY]

April 17, 2021

By Paul Moses

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[Photo above: Bishop Michael J. Hoeppner and other U.S. bishops concelebrate Mass in Rome, January 15, 2020 (CNS photo/Paul Haring).]

When Msgr. Roger Grundhaus wanted to baptize his niece’s baby in the cathedral of a nearby diocese, there was the simple matter of getting a letter from his bishop affirming that he was a priest in good standing.

Bishop Michael J. Hoeppner of Crookston in northwest Minnesota obliged the retired priest, a former vicar general of his diocese. “He is a person of good moral character and reputation,” he wrote in 2012. “I am unaware of anything in his background which would render him unsuitable to work with minor children.”

But contrary to that blanket statement, Hoeppner had already heard allegations directly from a diaconate candidate, Ron Vasek, that Grundhaus had molested him in the early 1970s. And so, attorney Jeff Anderson confronted the bishop with the letter during a deposition:…

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Legal lessons: Past abuse cases help train canon lawyers

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Catholic News Service - USCCB [Washington DC]

April 16, 2021

By Carol Glatz

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When Pope Francis abolished the “pontifical secret” covering the church’s judicial handling of cases of the sexual abuse of minors, it was hailed as a major step forward in promoting greater transparency and accountability.

At first glance, it means victims and witnesses are free to discuss a case and, even though Vatican officials are still obliged to maintain confidentiality, it “shall not prevent the fulfillment of the obligations laid down in all places by civil laws,” the amended law said.

But an additional consequence of this landmark change, enacted in mid-December 2019, will be its potential to provide much-needed practical training and multidisciplinary studies for those involved in the handling of abuse cases.

The faculty of canon law at Rome’s Pontifical Gregorian University recently announced it is offering a new diploma in penal jurisprudence — an “innovative” yearlong course designed to give canon law graduates practical skills and guidance in…

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Testimony allowed against former pastor in sex abuse case

WINONA (MN)
Winona Post [Winona MN]

April 16, 2021

By Chris Rogers

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Former Winona pastor Rick Iglesias’ legal defense against sexual abuse charges suffered a setback earlier this month when a judge ruled testimony from Iglesias’ former boss and senior pastor may be used in the case.

Iglesias, 66, was charged in 2019 with repeatedly sexually abusing a minor from 2010 to 2012 when Iglesias was a pastor at Pleasant Valley Church in Winona.

In one of the case’s most significant events to date, defense attorney Kurt Knuesel petitioned the court to suppress testimony from Dr. Kurt Bjorklund. Bjorklund was a minister at a church in Pennsylvania where Iglesias worked in 2019. Bjorklund was Iglesias’ supervisor, the two were old friends from seminary, and Knuesel wrote, Bjorklund was Iglesias’ “only spiritual superior in the church.” In summer 2019, Iglesias asked to meet Bjorklund at his house, reportedly disclosed that he had committed a sexual crime against a minor, and resigned from his…

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Former Cincinnati auxiliary bishop’s role with Catholic school undetermined, as parents express concerns

CINCINNATI (OH)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

April 16, 2021

By Jonah McKeown

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Parents at St. John the Baptist School in Hamilton County, Ohio expressed concern this week about former Auxiliary Bishop Joseph Binzer, who resigned and apologized last year after failing to report concerns about a priest to the archbishop, being assigned to pastor two churches associated with the school. 

The archdiocese has so far responded to the concerns by saying that Bishop Binzer’s role, if any, at the school has not yet been determined, and the archdiocese is listening to concerns from parents and parishioners. 

Bishop Binzer resigned last year as auxiliary bishop after failing to report to the archbishop allegations of inappropriate conduct on the part of a Cincinnati priest. 

Bishop Binzer was earlier this month named pastor of the Corpus Christi and St. John Neumann Pastoral Region, which includes two Catholic churches in Hamilton County. 

Parents say those two parishes feed into the nearby St. John the Baptist School.

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April 16, 2021

Yet Another Serial Abuser Left Off Chicago List, Still More Excuses from Catholic Officials

CHICAGO (IL)
SNAP - Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests [Chicago IL]

April 16, 2021

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Once again, a news story has broken about a serially abusive Church staffer who has been left off lists of perpetrators in multiple states, replete with weak excuses from Catholic officials attempting to explain away their lack of transparency. This is yet another example of why the only openness we can truly count on in cases of clergy sex crimes is that afforded to the public through grand jury investigations, interventions by attorneys general, and reports to police and prosecutors.

In this case, Deacon James Griffith was known to be an abuser as early as 1988, when he pleaded guilty to sexually abusing a child in Louisville, KY. Despite that conviction, Deacon Griffith – a member of the Passionist Order – was moved first to the Houston area, then San Antonio, Orlando, the suburbs of Chicago, and finally to metropolitan Detroit.  Despite working in these five places,…

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New Colorado law ends statute of limitations for civil sex abuse cases

DENVER (CO)
Fox 21 News [Colorado Springs CO]

April 16, 2021

By Angela Case

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DENVER — Gov. Jared Polis signed a bill into law Thursday ending the statute of limitations for civil sex abuse cases.

The bill removes the current six-year limitation on bringing a civil claim based on sexual misconduct. It applies to any incidents that happen on or after January 1, 2022.

The legislation defines sexual misconduct and removes restrictions that limit victims’ ability to file a civil action or recover damages.

The bipartisan bill was signed as survivors of sexual assault spoke out about how this bill will change lives.

Polis said he hopes this bill will help heal many people who weren’t able to seek immediate relief.

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Judge weighs whether parish, school assets could be used to pay clergy sex abuse claims

HAGåTñA (GUAM)
Guam Daily Post

April 16, 2021

By Haidee Eugenio Gilbert

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U.S. District Court Chief Judge Frances Tydingco-Gatewood on Friday held off on issuing a ruling that could lead to either the inclusion or exclusion of the assets of Catholic parishes and schools to help compensate 281 Guam clergy sex abuse claimants.

The matter is tied to the Archdiocese of Agana’s more-than-2-year-old bankruptcy case.

Mediation so far has not resulted in a plan agreeable to all parties to get the archdiocese out of bankruptcy. There remain lingering questions about the extent of the archdiocese’s assets and insurance coverage, among other things.

Tydingco-Gatewood on Friday heard three hours of opposing arguments on the motion for partial summary judgment that the committee representing clergy sex abuse claimants and other creditors filed in 2019.

The question is whether 33 Catholic parishes and schools are separate entities that can hold property, including beneficial interest in a trust, independent of the archdiocese, or the debtor.

If the…

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Franciscan U Provides Statement On Former Priest Accused Of Convincing Student To Have Sex With Him

STEUBENVILLE (OH)
WTRF-TV [Wheeling WV]

April 15, 2021

By John Lynch

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Franciscan University has provided the following statement after former Franciscan University priest, David R. Morrier, allegedly convinced a student he was counseling that having sex with him was necessary for mental health treatment purposes.

“The University has cooperated and will continue to cooperate fully with authorities concerning the conduct of Father David Morrier who entered a plea of not guilty during his arraignment today for a very serious crime.

We are aware of the pain so many people have experienced from criminal sexual misconduct committed by some in the Church and continue to offer atonement and prayers of healing for those victims. The University wants a just outcome. These charges are being dealt with in the court system where they belong. Franciscan University will not be commenting further on this case while it is still ongoing.

Sexual assault is not only a crime but a serious sin, and when Franciscan University receives sexual misconduct…

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Ohio Priest Accused Of Raping Student, Convinced Her Sex Will Improve Mental Health

STEUBENVILLE (OH)
International Business Times

April 15, 2021

By Dane Enerio

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KEY POINTS

  • David Morrier was a priest at the Franciscan University of Steubenville in Ohio when he allegedly raped the student
  • He convinced the victim that engaging in sexual acts would help with her mental health issues, officials say
  • Loretto-based Franciscan Friars said Morrier was dismissed in 2015 for allegations of sexual misconduct

A former priest from the Franciscan University of Steubenville in Ohio pleaded not guilty in court Wednesday to allegations that he raped a student from November 2010 to spring 2013.

David Morrier, 59, who was a friar of the Province of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus Third Order Regular of St. Francis of Penance, entered a not guilty plea to one count of rape and two counts of sexual battery before a Jefferson County, Ohio, grand jury, WTRF reported. The charges stemmed from a complaint reported in 2018 to the Catholic Diocese of Steubenville by the alleged victim. 

Jefferson County Prosecutor Jane…

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The God Squad: Keeping the faith

PLATTSBURGH (NY)
Press-Republican [Plattsburgh NY]

April 16, 2021

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Q: Dear Rabbi Gellman, I really enjoy reading your God Squad column. I am a Christian, but boy do I have questions.

I do believe in God, although I don’t think we really understand God. At least I don’t. I wonder how or why a perfect God could have created such imperfect people. We don’t take care of our planet; we are not kind to animals or even each other. People can be awful. Greed and vanity run amok. I do know that people can sometimes be wonderful too.

I see organized religion as somewhat of a construct to control the masses. Scandals rock the Catholic Church. I knew a pastor with a small Baptist Church who left his wife and son and ran off with another woman. He also left his church behind. But he wants to tell me how to keep my house in order? That one made…

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Is the Camden Diocese Worse than Others When It Comes to Clergy Sex Crimes?

CAMDEN (NJ)
Horowitz Law [Fort Lauderdale FL]

April 16, 2021

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Is it just our impression or does the Camden Catholic diocese have a greater problem with clergy sex crimes and cover ups than most dioceses?

That’s of course hard to determine and fundamentally unfair.

The phrase “more than most” is vague, especially given that there are about 180 Catholic dioceses across the United States.

A better metric to consider is this: How does the rate of clergy sex abuse in the Diocese of Camden compare to dioceses of about the same size?

And using this scale, indeed, our hunch that there are more child molesting clerics in Camden than other places seems to be right.

According to BishopAccountability.org and Catholic-Hierarchy.org, the Camden diocese has a Catholic population of 458,000.

So Camden is just a little BIGGER than the San Francisco archdiocese (425,000 Catholics), the Paterson NJ diocese (420,000 Catholics), the Rockford IL diocese (420,000 Catholics) and

Camden has 68 publicly…

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Lawsuit to proceed despite death of priest accused of sexual assault

MONCTON (CANADA)
CBC (Canadian Broadcasting Corporation) [Toronto, Canada]

April 15, 2021

By Mia Urquhart

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Father Paul Breau died last June at the age of 89

The death of a former Roman Catholic priest accused of sexually assaulting boys won’t affect a lawsuit against him and the church. 

Moncton lawyer Brian Murphy said the case against Father Paul Breau will go ahead because it also names the Catholic Archdiocese of Moncton. 

“We consider that the diocese is responsible for the actions of the various priests who have been sued … so it really doesn’t make much difference at all in the case going forward,” he said when reached by phone Thursday.  

Breau, the former chaplain at the University of Moncton, died in June at the age of 89, reported Radio-Canada. He was buried in Notre-Dame-du-Calvaire cemetery in Dieppe.

He was one of three former priests named in a series of lawsuits by roughly 30 plaintiffs. 

Murphy represents nine of those plaintiffs — all men who say they…

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Deacon James Griffith was moved to Chicago and other church jurisdictions after being convicted of a child sex offense in 1988 in Louisville, Kentucky. Louisville Metro Police Department

Passionists order, Catholic dioceses didn’t reveal predator deacon in their midst

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Sun-Times [Chicago IL]

April 16, 2021

By Robert Herguth

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What makes James Griffith stand out amid the scandal over sexually abusive clerics is how many chances the Catholic church hierarchy had to tell the public about him — and how many times it failed to do so.

[Photo above: Deacon James Griffith was moved to Chicago and other church jurisdictions after being convicted of a child sex offense in 1988 in Louisville, Kentucky. Louisville Metro Police Department]

More than a decade after pleading guilty in 1988 to sexually abusing a young boy in Louisville, Kentucky, Deacon James Griffith was moved by his religious order to a monastery next to Immaculate Conception School in Norwood Park.

The Passionists — the Catholic religious order that at the time was overseeing the church and school just north of the Kennedy Expressway on the Northwest Side — say he was assigned there in 2002 “to work in the provincial office” on the…

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SNAP Applauds as Colorado Governor Signs SB 73 into Law

DENVER (CO)
SNAP - Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests [Chicago IL]

April 15, 2021

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Colorado’s governor has signed SB 73 into law, an important piece of legislation that will protect future children from abuse and provide more current victims with a pathway to justice. We applaud this development and appreciate the many survivors who shared their stories, testified in support of this reform, and worked tirelessly with their legislative allies to get this needed bill passed.

Even though SB 73 only helps survivors whose statute of limitations has not run by January 1, 2022, when this bill takes effect, as well as future sexual assault victims, this reform demonstrates that the Colorado legislature recognizes the seriousness of this public health crisis. We are grateful that they are willing to do what they can to better protect the vulnerable and confront those who hide and enable sexual predators.

It is a fact that current and past civil statutes have protected the wrong individuals and institutions…

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Colorado will lift time limits in 2022 for victims to sue child sex abusers

DENVER (CO)
The Denver Post [Denver CO]

April 15, 2021

By Saja Hindi

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Gov. Jared Polis signed the bill into law Thursday and it’ll take effect Jan. 1, 2022

With a few simple strokes of his pen, Colorado Gov. Jared Polis signed into law Thursday something that was decades in the making: removing the statute of limitations for survivors of sexual abuse to sue — no matter how much time has passed.

Senate Bill 21-073 was sent to the governor on April 8 and the law will take effect Jan. 1, 2022. It doesn’t apply retroactively, so victims whose statute of limitations have already expired will not be able to sue their abusers in civil court.

The law will apply for any civil case where:

  • the statute of limitations hasn’t yet expired;
  • the abuse happened in Colorado; and
  • the abuse could be considered a felony or Class 1 misdemeanor if it was a criminal case.

The governor noted he was signing the bill during Child…

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Polis signs bill removing legal time limit for childhood sex abuse victims

DENVER (CO)
Colorado Politics [Denver CO]

April 15, 2021

By Michael Karlik

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Beginning on January 1, 2022, survivors of childhood sex abuse and other types of sexual misconduct will be able to hold their perpetrators accountable in Colorado’s legal system, no matter how much time has elapsed since the offense.

Gov. Jared Polis on Thursday signed Senate Bill 73, which removes the restrictive statute of limitations placed on victims to file civil lawsuits against their perpetrators or institutions — like employers or youth programs — that are implicated in the misconduct. Enactment of the legislation comes 15 years after an intense lobbying effort killed a similar attempt at increasing the length of time survivors had to sue for their injuries.

“Victims deserve justice whenever they choose to seek it. Outdated laws won’t be able to stop them anymore,” said Rep. Dafna Michaelson Jenet, D-Commerce City, one of the bill’s sponsors. The other House of Representatives sponsor, Rep. Matt Soper, R-Delta, called…

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Church waiting on decision to determine if parishes are considered assets

HAGåTñA (GUAM)
KUAM Radio [Guam]

April 16, 2021

By Nestor Licanto

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Another motion hearing was heard today in Guam District court in the long-running clergy sex abuse civil case.

The church first filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in January 2019. It was forced to sell off assets such as the former Redemptoris Mater Seminary in Yona to help pay for more than 200 claims filed against local Catholic clergy for alleged abuse that dates back decades. Today Archdiocese of Agana Attorney Ford El-Saesser argued to exclude other church assets from any claims settlement.

“We believe that the parishes are not part of the bankruptcy property, the bankruptcy estate as it’s called, and I think you’ve all heard the arguments and reported on them,” he said. “So I don’t really want to get into a discussion especially since while we’re really just waiting on the judge’s decision. And we’ll be able to answer the questions then, thanks.”

The church has been in…

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